pkpbip
Chemical
- Mar 28, 2004
- 10
I am sizing a 3 phase separator in a gas plant that receives cooled vapor and liquid hydrocarbon from the 1st stage of a compressor and also a sour water stream. The separator will then separate the hydrocarbon liquid, water, and vapor before sending the vapor to the second stage of the compressor directly.
My question is this: what is the reason for the rules of thumb behind using a L/D ratio between 3 and 4?
I am trying to size the drum to fit in an existing structure to avoid having to build a new one. The vapor load is high and is calling for a 7.5 ft diameter. This is required for the critical velocity and also some other factors (such as minimum distance between HLL and LLL). I am using a vertical and a horizontal demister pad to allow for a smaller drum.
The problem I have is that I have PLENTY of liquid holdup time and don't need a 22.5 ft long drum for this reason. I would still have plenty of liquid holdup with a 15 ft long drum.
Is the reason for L/D ratio rule of thumb to allow sufficent time for the liquid droplet to fall before the vapor leaves the drum? The drum will have two inlets feeding through slotted T distributor directed at the vessel heads. Does this help? Can I push to have a lower L/D ratio with some other controls or is there a different reason entirely for the rule of thumb?
Thanks in advance for your help!
My question is this: what is the reason for the rules of thumb behind using a L/D ratio between 3 and 4?
I am trying to size the drum to fit in an existing structure to avoid having to build a new one. The vapor load is high and is calling for a 7.5 ft diameter. This is required for the critical velocity and also some other factors (such as minimum distance between HLL and LLL). I am using a vertical and a horizontal demister pad to allow for a smaller drum.
The problem I have is that I have PLENTY of liquid holdup time and don't need a 22.5 ft long drum for this reason. I would still have plenty of liquid holdup with a 15 ft long drum.
Is the reason for L/D ratio rule of thumb to allow sufficent time for the liquid droplet to fall before the vapor leaves the drum? The drum will have two inlets feeding through slotted T distributor directed at the vessel heads. Does this help? Can I push to have a lower L/D ratio with some other controls or is there a different reason entirely for the rule of thumb?
Thanks in advance for your help!